SC - cheese questions and alfalfa

Sue Clemenger mooncat at in-tch.com
Tue Aug 8 05:56:47 PDT 2000


No, no...it's ubiquitous (i.e., everywhere) out here in the west (like
lilac and knapweed).  I was just drawing comparisons between other
plants that I've always thought of as more or less indigenous which
turned out to be imports....
- --Maire, who loves lilacs and the smell of fresh alfalfa hay (but can do
without bucking another bale as long as she lives, thank you!), and who
would really, really like to see knapweed go away!

LrdRas at aol.com wrote:
> 
> In a message dated 8/7/00 9:19:17 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> mooncat at in-tch.com writes:
> 
> << So, in other words, it's not native to the US? (sounds like other
>  ubiquitous stuff like lilac and knapweed!)
>  --Maire >>
> 
> There is no ubiquitousness.  It is a deep-rooted European leguminous plant
> (Medicago sativa). :-)
> 
> Ras
> The test of good manners is to be patient with bad ones.- Solomon Ibn Gabirol
> http://members.aol.com/AbhainnCG/
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